Euroclassic Notturno


Euroclassic Notturno is a six-hour radio sequence of classical music recordings assembled by BBC Radio from material supplied by members of the European Broadcasting Union and distributed, via the EBU's Euroradio network, to a number of these broadcasters for use in their overnight classical music schedules. The recordings used are not taken from commercially available CDs but come instead from earlier radio broadcasts.
Supplied by the BBC on a commercial basis, the service claims to provide broadcasters with a less expensive alternative to local origination of overnight classical-music programming.

Format

The sequence is put together by a small BBC team in London and Salford, and gaps are provided in the schedule to allow for local origination of explanatory material in each broadcaster's national language, top-of-the-hour news summaries, etc. In the United Kingdom, the sequence is broadcast on BBC Radio 3 without news.

Broadcast

The service is streamed from Broadcasting House in London between 00:00 and 06:00 Central European Time seven days a week, though actual transmission times may be shifted locally – the BBC itself, for instance, broadcasts its own version between 00:30 and 06:30.
BBC Radio 3's Through the Night was first broadcast on 5 May 1996 when 24-hour broadcasting was introduced on the station. The first presenter was Donald Macleod.
As transmission is unattended the playout servers are duplicated to provide resilience, although the service has, in fact, run reliably since 1998.

Broadcasters

EBU member broadcasting organisations currently taking the service include :
CountryStationBroadcasterLocal titleTime
Austrialang\|de|Ö1 Nachtmusik